IE8: Web Slices

Description

IE8 introduces Web Slices; a feature dreamt up by Jane Kim, Program Manager on the IE Team. WebSlices enable users to subscribe to specially marked content on a Web page. When the content changes, the user receives a notification on the Favorites Bar.You've
met Jane before on Channel 9(watch that video to get a better idea of who she is and what the thinking was behind Web Slices). What's the state of Web Slices at Release Candidate quality? Anything new since Beta 1? Tune in.

The Discussion

Well, I like web slicees and accelerators, and the rumor is IE8 RTM'd...give me

In all seriousness, these are great consumer features. My only beef with IE8 is Chrome feels so much quicker, it is rather insane. Hovering over contacts in IE8 makes the process jump in CPU usage to ~45%, Chrome and firefox it is only a few percent.

Aside from the last comment I made about these webslices, I really do think they should be have been built detached from the IE8 browser shell. A webslice is a great idea why confine it to only being usable while running IE8, and on a toolbar -so limiting.
If webslices could be more like a desktop gadget, if you could have a mini toolbar of just webslices that you could pin at the top of the screen(in between than usually empty titlebar area) etc... above other applications, then they'd be accessible all the
time, plus if you followed a link from a webslices etc it could be redirected to *cough* something other than the IE8 browser shell.

I do not mean to be too overly critical of the IE team, but I think it will take a lot of work from them to win back users of people like the people that hang out on Channel9. The browser simply doesn't offer useful features that people use everyday.

Web slices are not a new idea, sorry credits must be given to where it came from first. Web slices are nothing more than a half copy of Apple's Web Clip (notice that IE team did not think during months in order to come up with more differences in the name
for the feature) which was introduced with Safari running on Mac OS X Leopard back to 2007.

The feature allows the user to choose any web page marked content so that he can get live updated of the content separately from the browser. And here comes the point where Web Clip is well better implemented than Web Slices. Web Clip automatically transform
the part of the subscribed web page content to a widget (Microsoft calls that gadget) which is permanently updated by DashBoard (the centralized widget engine in Mac OS X). The nice thing is that the user does not need to bother with notifications inside the
browser to view the most recent updates of the content, every time, he views it, he can be sure that he has the latest update. Also he does not need to launch any browser to view it, as the web page marked content gets integrated in the widget environment
Dashboard and to view it, only accessing Dashboard is necessary. In other words you get your subscribed web content at any time you need it. And the engine is very powerful because any portion of a page can be transformed to a widget because Dashboard uses
the webkit engine.

Sad that such channel9 videos tries to describe an innovation which is not, and sadly credit to where the idea comes from is not mentioned. It ok to take an idea from somewhere else, but don't make it sound as a Microsoft's innovation or new idea.

We got the name of the interviewee wrong (and embedded it in the video file). So, I took it down until we correct it. It will be back up soon! Also, another conversation about IE8's dev tools will appear shortly.C

You keep an eye on email, RSS feeds, news, Twitter and social networking sites for updates on your friends' social activities. LiveSlices was born to address this inconvenience and brings ease to access tiny applications that can live in your browser toolbar.
LiveSlices is a platform for "Web Slices" which allows you to keep yourself up to date of the online stuffs that matter most to you: http://LiveSlices.com